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The Buffettology Workbook: Value Investing The Warren Buffett Way

Product ID : 37757169


Galleon Product ID 37757169
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About The Buffettology Workbook: Value Investing The

Product Description Timeless Investing Strategies for Any Economy For five decades, Warren Buffett has been making himself one of the wealthiest men in the world, amassing more than 30 billion dollars by investing in the stock market. Remarkably, he did it by spurning popular Wall Street trends, adhering instead to his own unique discipline, one the world has come to know as Buffettology. In The Buffettology Workbook, internationally acclaimed writer and lecturer Mary Buffett has again joined forces with David Clark, the world's leading authority on Warren Buffett's investment methods, to create an in-depth, step-by-step guide to the concepts and equations Warren Buffett uses to create fantastic wealth. Here you will learn: The difference between a great company and a great undervalued company How the short-sightedness of Wall Street pundits can work to your advantage Where to look for investments with long-term, consistent, and extraordinary growth potential To perform the same financial calculations Buffett uses, and apply them to stocks you'd like to buy Review Stevin Hoover Hoover Capital Management Absolutely the best book ever written on Warren Buffett's investment methods. BusinessWeek A probe inside the head of a financial genius. Rocky Mountain News (Denver) One of the best books about mega investor Warren Buffett. About the Author Mary Buffett is the coauthor of Scribner’s bestselling Buffettology series, a sought-after business speaker world-wide, and a contributor to HuffPost and the online magazine  Thrive Global. Mary and Sean Seah recently launched the Buffett Online School (BuffettOnlineSchool.com), a monthly webinar sharing investment insights and helping students learn to build successful stock portfolios. For over twenty years, David Clark has been considered the world’s leading authority on the subject of Warren Buffett’s investment methods. His international bestselling investment books, coauthored with Mary Buffett— Buffettology, The Buffettology Workbook,  The New Buffettology, The Tao of Warren Buffett,  Warren Buffett and the Interpretation of Financial Statements, The Management Secrets of Warren Buffett,  Warren Buffett and The Art of Stock Arbitrage, and  The Warren Buffett Stock Portfolio—have been translated into more than twenty foreign languages and are considered “investment classics” the world over. He has once again joined forces with Mary Buffett, and together they are writing  Warren Buffett Investment Analysis, an in-depth investment manual for professional and aspiring investors. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter One: Short-Sightedness and the Bad News Phenomenon: The Gifts That Keep On Giving Short-sightedness and the bad news phenomenon. What are these things and what do they have to do with Warren Buffett? The answer is everything. If the vast majority of the stock market were not short-sighted, Warren Buffett would never have an opportunity to buy some of the world's greatest businesses at discount prices. He could never have bought 1.7 million shares of The Washington Post twenty-seven years ago for approximately $6.14 a share. The Washington Post now trades at approximately $500 a share, which makes his $10.2 million initial investment worth approximately $863.8 million today. That equates to a pretax annual compounding rate of return of 17.8%. Without the short-sightedness of the stock market, Warren could not have bought Coca-Cola for $5.22 a share twelve years ago. It now trades at approximately $50 a share, which equates to a pretax annual compounding rate of return of approximately 21%. Warren discovered early on in his career that 95% of the participants in the stock market, from Internet day traders to mutual fund managers who manage billions, are only interested in making a quick buck. Yes, some pay lip service to the importance of long-term investing, but in truth they are stuck on making fast money. Warren fo